
NON-PEER REVIEW Using Telemetry to Navigate the MarCO cubesats to Mars Brian Young1 and Tomas Martin-Mur1 1Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology 4800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, California 91109 Abstract The two MarCO “cubesat” spacecraft were launched alongside NASA’s InSight in May 2018, operating primarily as a technology demonstrator for small satellites in deep space, with a nominal (but experimental) mission to provide relay support for the primary spacecraft during entry, descent, and landing at Mars. Due to their small size and experimental nature, extensive use of telemetry beyond that commonly used by deep space missions was necessary to complete adequate orbit determination. In particular, telemetry was valuable in two areas: use of wheel speeds during thruster calibrations to improve knowledge of individual thruster force levels, and the use of propellant temperature and pressure data to correctly model small thrusting events on board the vehicle. Keywords: Navigation, Orbit Determination, Cubesats, Telemetry, Reaction Wheel Speeds, Cold Gas Thrusters Introduction NASA’s two MarCO (Mars Cube One) spacecraft were launched May 5, 2018, alongside the primary InSight (Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport) mission. The six-unit (6U) “cubesats”, pictured in figure 1 with marked body axes, were built primarily to demonstrate the viability of these small, inexpensive spacecraft in a deep space environment, with a nominal purpose of providing relay communications during InSight’s entry, descent, and landing (EDL)[1]. It is important to distinguish between the primary mission and the nominal purpose; while the spacecraft design was driven by the relay mission, as experimental spacecraft, the MarCO spacecraft were never considered necessary for successful completion of the InSight mission, and MarCO would have been considered successful after demonstrating its viability, even if the EDL mission was never completed. Still, after 6 months in flight, on November 26, 2018, both MarCO spacecraft performed as designed, relaying data back to Earth in real time during InSight’s successful landing, providing confirmation of vehicle safety and the first surface picture (figure 2) hours before the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), the prime EDL relay asset, was able to retransmit that data. 18th Australian Aerospace Congress, 24-28 February 2019, Melbourne NON-PEER REVIEW Figure 1: Geometry and Body Axes of MarCO spacecraft Figure 2: InSight’s first surface image, transmitted by MarCO-A 18th Australian Aerospace Congress, 24-28 February 2019, Melbourne NON-PEER REVIEW The successful navigation of MarCO-A (Eva) and MarCO-B (Wall-E) was critical to both the tech- nology demonstration and EDL relay missions. First, any technology demonstration necessitated successful navigation, since any subsequent mission would depend on an assurance of navigabil- ity. This meant that mission requirements involved demonstrating viable orbit determination (OD) solutions as well as implementation of a trajectory correction maneuver (TCM). Second, a suc- cessful relay required that the spacecraft be redirected to appropriate target zones with reasonable knowledge for antenna pointing throughout the flight and EDL. While in many ways, navigation of these spacecraft was similar to that for their larger brethren, there were a few distinctions[2]. First consider the implementations of TCMs, using the Vacco- provided cold gas thruster system[3], and the XACT attitude control system delivered by Blue Canyon Technologies[4]. These off-the-shelf parts were simpler than those on larger vehicles, and required some extra work to use successfully. In particular, while most recent three-axis stabilized spacecraft use accelerometers to end maneuvers at a specified accumulated velocity change, MarCO maneuvers were specified as a number of thruster-seconds. Due to varying thrust levels and off- pulsing for attitude control, the mapping of thruster seconds to total velocity change (∆V) was not obvious, particularly for the first maneuvers. A set of “thruster calibrations” were performed after launch to provide an initial estimate of thruster performance, using a novel approach to integrate reaction wheel telemetry with Doppler data in orbit determination. Continued tracking of detailed maneuver performance as the mission flew was used to further improve accuracy of later maneuvers. The details of this is the focus of the first section of this work. Second, tracking data was limited due to power constraints on the spacecraft. This is because the amount of power the spacecraft could collect with solar panels was limited by the small form factor and limited available surface area, while the amount of power required to transmit to Earth at a given data rate is independent of spacecraft size. Given sizing and margins, this translated to average tracking passes with two-way Doppler of 1–2 hours, which beyond general operational constraints, also limited the OD capabilities, since during long Doppler passes, the rotational motion of the Earth yields additional information on the velocity perpendicular to the Earth-line. This was mitigated to some extent by both the relative laxity of targeting requirements (∼100 km), as well as the high availability of ∆DOR (Delta differential one-way ranging) measurements by leveraging scheduled opportunities for InSight. However, MarCO-B suffered from large number of small thrusting events due to leaks in the thruster system, and the available tracking data proved insufficient. Instead, due to limited tracking and significant uncertainties, the addition of telemetry data, including event logs, attitude records, and temperature/pressure records, was required for successful orbit determination. This is in contrast with most missions, where telemetry data are usually treated as ancillary, so that Navigation performance is independent of other concerns. The details of this integration and analysis is the topic of the second section of this work. The MarCO spacecraft succeeded in their mission, successfully relaying InSight EDL data and demonstrating the viability of this class of mission. While the details of the challenges associated with these spacecraft are unlikely to directly apply to future missions, greater flexibility in using and integrating telemetry into Navigation processes will be important due to a cubesat’s limited nature. 18th Australian Aerospace Congress, 24-28 February 2019, Melbourne NON-PEER REVIEW Thruster Calibrations Using Reaction Wheel Speeds Each MarCO spacecraft performed TCMs and wheel desaturation maneuvers using a cold gas thruster system provided by Vacco. This system, with eight thrusters on the +Z face of the spacecraft had a specific impulse of approximately 40 seconds, with a propellant tank allowing up to 60 m/sec of ∆V, with 33 m/sec of that allocated to TCMs. The thrusters were arranged as shown in figure 3 with “TCM” thrusters B, C, F, and G directed along with +Z axis for translational motion, and the “ACS” (attitude control system) thrusters A, D, E, and H canted 60◦ off axis in the ±Y direction for attitude control. A maneuver was implemented by specifying an attitude quaternion, and commanding the thruster system to fire for a set number of millisecond-long thruster pulses, as well as a limiting total wall clock time. The maneuver would shut off after it reached either the wall clock limit or the specified number of thruster pulses. The thruster and ACS system fired the TCM thrusters with duty cycles modulated to maintain the fixed attitude, with occasional firing by the ACS thrusters to further maintain the attitude. Reaction wheels were disabled during maneuvers, with all attitude control handled by the thrusters. Note that the maneuvers began firing assuming nominal thruster performance and spacecraft moments of inertia, with the controller adapting to variations of performance. No feed-forward of controller gains was performed, and no manual updates of thruster or inertia data were performed due to the software architecture making those updates too risky given acceptable performance, so the transient attitude variations were similar for all maneuvers. Before the first TCM, which was originally scheduled 15 days after launch for MarCO-A, it was desired to understand the in-flight performance of the system. In particular, this meant understanding the thrust level of each TCM thruster, as well as the duty cycles necessary to balance torques and maintain attitude. In order to measure this, a “thruster calibration” was performed over five days, starting three days after launch. During this calibration activity, the thrusters were fired for approximately 10 seconds at three mutually orthogonal attitudes, each of which were 55◦ from the Earth-line and within the low-gain antenna (LGA) antenna pattern, allowing high precision measurement of the total ∆V on the earth line. Usually for larger spacecraft, these Doppler measurements are sufficient, since the accelerometer cutoff and adaptive pointing controls mean that knowing the ∆V in the spacecraft frame is sufficient to achieve good performance. However, since the controller was not necessarily in steady-state after 10 seconds, and the mapping of ∆V to thruster seconds is dependent on the steady state duty cycles, a more detailed thruster-by-thruster analysis was needed. Note that this section focuses on MarCO-A, because the thruster problems described in the next section complicated the analysis for MarCO-B in a way that yields
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